📄 Extracted Text (16,756 words)
UNIFORM PRUDENT MANAGEMENT OF
INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
drafted by the
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
and by it
APPROVED AND RECOMMENDED FOR ENACTMENT
IN ALL THE STATES
at its
ANNUAL CONFERENCE
MEETING IN ITS ONE-HUNDRED-AND-FIFTEENTH YEAR
HILTON HEAD, SOUTH CAROLINA
July 7-14, 2006
WITH PREFATORY NOTE AND COMMENTS
Copyright (02006
By
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
November 8.2007
EFTA00598276
ABOUT NCCUSL
The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL), now in its
I I5th year, provides states with non-partisan, well-conceived and well-drafted legislation that
brings clarity and stability to critical areas of state statutory law.
Conference members must be lawyers, qualified to practice law. They are practicing lawyers,
judges, legislators and legislative staff and law professors, who have been appointed by state
governments as well as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands to
research, draft and promote enactment of uniform state laws in areas of state law where
uniformity is desirable and practical.
• NCCUSL strengthens the federal system by providing rules and procedures that are
consistent from state to state but that also reflect the diverse experience of the states.
• NCCUSL statutes are representative of state experience, because the organization is made
up of representatives from each state, appointed by state government.
• NCCUSL keeps state law up-to-date by addressing important and timely legal issues.
• NCCUSL's efforts reduce the need for individuals and businesses to deal with different
laws as they move and do business in different states.
• NCCUSL's work facilitates economic development and provides a legal platform for
foreign entities to deal with U.S. citizens and businesses.
• NCCUSL Commissioners donate thousands of hours of their time and legal and drafting
expertise every year as a public service, and receive no salary or compensation for their
work.
• NCCUSL's deliberative and uniquely open drafting process draws on the expertise of
commissioners, but also utilizes input from legal experts, and advisors and observers
representing the views of other legal organizations or interests that will be subject to the
proposed laws.
• NCCUSL is a state-supported organization that represents true value for the states,
providing services that most states could not otherwise afford or duplicate.
EFTA00598277
DRAFTING COMMITTEE ON UNIFORM PRUDENT MANAGEMENT OF
INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
The Committee appointed by and representing the National Conference of Commissioners on
Uniform State Laws in drafting this Act consists of the following individuals:
BARRY C. HAWKINS.I. 300 Atlantic St., Stamford, CT 06901, Chair
JOHN P. BURTON, M. Box 1357, 315 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM 87501
MARY JO HOWARD DIVELY, Carnegie Mellon University, 5000 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh, PA
15213
L.S. JERRY KURTZ, JR., 1050 Beech Ln., Anchorage, AK 99501
SHELDON F. KURTZ, University of Iowa College of Law, 446 BLB, Iowa City, IA 52242
JOHN H. LANGBEIN, Yale Law School, M. Box 208215, New Haven, CT 06520 -8215
JOHN J. MCAVOY, 3110 Brandywine St. NW, Washington, DC 20008
MATTHEW S. RAE.bJR., 520 S. Grand Ave., 7th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2645
GLEE S. SMITH, Box 667, Lawrence, KS 66044
SUSAN N. GARY, University of Oregon, School of Law, 1515 Agate St., Eugene, OR 97403,
Reporter
EX OFFICIO
HOWARD J. SWIBEL, 120 S. Riverside Plaza, Suite 1200, Chicago, IL 60606, President
TOM BOLT, Corporate Place, 5600 Royal Dane Mall, St. Thomas, VI 00802-6410, Division
Chair
AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION ADVISORS
CAROL G. KROCH, Rodney Square North, 1100 Market St., Wilmington, DE 19890, ABA
Advisor
JOHN K. NOTZ, JR., 191 N. Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL 60606-1698, ABA Section Advisor
CYNTHIA ROWLAND, One Ferry Building, Suite 200, San Francisco, CA 94111, ABA Section
Advisor
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
WILLIAM H. HENNING, University of Alabama School of Law, Box 870382, Tuscaloosa, AL
35487-0382, Executive Director
Copies of this Act may be obtained from:
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
211 E. Ontario Street, Suite 1300
Chicago, Illinois 60611
312/915-0195
www.nccusl.org
EFTA00598278
UNIFORM PRUDENT MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prefatory Note 1
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE 6
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS 6
SECTION 3. STANDARD OF CONDUCT IN MANAGING AND INVESTING
INSTITUTIONAL FUND 11
SECTION 4. APPROPRIATION FOR EXPENDITURE OR ACCUMULATION OF
ENDOWMENT FUND; RULES OF CONSTRUCTION 19
[SECTION 5. DELEGATION OF MANAGEMENT AND INVESTMENT FUNCTIONS] 29
SECTION 6. RELEASE OR MODIFICATION OF RESTRICTIONS ON MANAGEMENT,
INVESTMENT, OR PURPOSE 31
SECTION 7. REVIEWING COMPLIANCE 35
SECTION 8. APPLICATION TO EXISTING INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS 35
SECTION 9. RELATION TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN GLOBAL AND NATIONAL
COMMERCE ACT 35
SECTION 10. UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND CONSTRUCTION 36
SECTION 11. EFFECTIVE DATE 36
SECTION 12. REPEAL 36
EFTA00598279
UNIFORM PRUDENT MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
Prefatory Note
Reasons for Revision. The Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act
(UPMIFA) replaces the Uniform Management of Institutional Funds Act (UMIFA). The
National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws approved UMIFA in 1972, and
47 jurisdictions have enacted the act. UMIFA provided guidance and authority to charitable
organizations within its scope concerning the management and investment of funds held by those
organizations, UMIFA provided endowment spending rules that did not depend on trust
accounting principles of income and principal, and UMIFA permitted the release of restrictions
on the use or management of funds under certain circumstances. The changes UMIFA made to
the law permitted charitable organizations to use modern investment techniques such as total-
return investing and to determine endowment fund spending based on spending rates rather than
on determinations of "income" and "principal."
UMIFA was drafted almost 35 years ago, and portions of it are now out of date. The
prudence standards in UMIFA have provided useful guidance, but prudence norms evolve over
time. The new Act provides modem articulations of the prudence standards for the management
and investment of charitable funds and for endowment spending. The Uniform Prudent Investor
Act (UPIA), an Act promulgated in 1994 and already enacted in 43 jurisdictions, served as a
model for many of the revisions. UPIA updates rules on investment decision malting for trusts,
including charitable trusts, and imposes additional duties on trustees for the protection of
beneficiaries. UPMIFA applies these rules and duties to charities organized as nonprofit
corporations. UPMIFA does not apply to trusts managed by corporate and other fiduciaries that
are not charities, because UPIA provides management and investment standards for those trusts.
In applying principles based on UPIA to charities organized as nonprofit corporations,
UPMIFA combines the approaches taken by UPIA and by the Revised Model Nonprofit
Corporation Act (RMNCA). UPMIFA reflects the fact that standards for managing and
investing institutional funds are and should be the same regardless of whether a charitable
organization is organized as a trust, a nonprofit corporation, or some other entity. See Bevis
Longstreth, Modem Investment Management and the Prudent Man Rule 7 (1986) (stating "[t]he
modem paradigm of prudence applies to all fiduciaries who are subject to some version of the
prudent man rule, whether under ERISA, the private foundation provisions of the Code, UMIFA,
other state statutes, or the common law."); Harvey P. Dale Nonprofit Directors and Officers -
Duties and Liabilitiesfor Investment Decisions, 1994 . Conf. Tax Plan. 501(c)(3) Org's.
Ch. 4.
UPMIFA provides guidance and authority to charitable organizations concerning the
management and investment of funds held by those organizations, and UPMIFA imposes
additional duties on those who manage and invest charitable funds. These duties provide
additional protections for charities and also protect the interests of donors who want to see their
contributions used wisely.
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UPMIFA modernizes the rules governing expenditures from endowment funds, both to
provide stricter guidelines on spending from endowment funds and to give institutions the ability
to cope more easily with fluctuations in the value of the endowment.
Finally, UPMIFA updates the provisions governing the release and modification of
restrictions on charitable funds to permit more efficient management of these funds. These
provisions derive from the approach taken in the Uniform Trust Code (UTC) for modifying
charitable trusts. Like the UTC provisions, UPMIFA's modification rules preserve the historic
position of the attorneys general in most states as the overseers of charities.
As under UMIFA, the new Act applies to charities organized as charitable trusts, as
nonprofit corporations, or in some other manner, but the rules do not apply to funds managed by
trustees that are not charities. Thus, the Act does not apply to trusts managed by corporate or
individual trustees, but the Act does apply to trusts managed by charities.
Prudent Management and Investment. UMIFA applied the 1972 prudence standard to
investment decision making. In contrast, UPMIFA will give charities updated and more useful
guidance by incorporating language from UPIA, modified to fit the special needs of charities.
The revised Act spells out more of the factors a charity should consider in making investment
decisions, thereby imposing a modern, well accepted, prudence standard based on UPIA.
Among the expressly enumerated prudence factors in UPMIFA is "the preservation of the
endowment fund," a standard not articulated in UMIFA.
In addition to identifying factors that a charity must consider in making management and
investment decisions, UPMIFA requires a charity and those who manage and invest its funds to:
I. Give primary consideration to donor intent as expressed in a gift instrument,
2. Act in good faith, with the care an ordinarily prudent person would exercise,
3. Incur only reasonable costs in investing and managing charitable funds,
4. Make a reasonable effort to verify relevant facts,
5. Make decisions about each asset in the context of the portfolio of investments,
as part of an overall investment strategy,
6. Diversify investments unless due to special circumstances, the purposes of the
fund are better served without diversification,
7. Dispose of unsuitable assets, and
8. In general, develop an investment strategy appropriate for the fund and the
charity.
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UMIFA did not articulate these requirements.
Thus, UPMIFA strengthens the rules governing management and investment decision
making by charities and provides more guidance for those who manage and invest the funds.
Donor Intent with Respect to Endowments. UPMIFA improves the protection of
donor intent with respect to expenditures from endowments. When a donor expresses intent
clearly in a written gift instrument, the Act requires that the charity follow the donor's
instructions. When a donor's intent is not so expressed, UPMIFA directs the charity to spend an
amount that is prudent, consistent with the purposes of the fund, relevant economic factors, and
the donor's intent that the fund continue in perpetuity. This approach allows the charity to give
effect to donor intent, protect its endowment, assure generational equity, and use the endowment
to support the purposes for which the endowment was created.
Retroactivity. Like UMIFA, UPIA, the Uniform Principal and Income Act of 1961, and
the Uniform Principal and Income Act of 1997, UPMIFA applies retroactively to institutional
funds created before and prospectively to institutional funds created after enactment of the
statute. Regarding the considerations motivating this treatment of the issues, see the comment to
Section 4.
Endowment Spending. UPMIFA improves the endowment spending rule by
eliminating the concept of historic dollar value and providing better guidance regarding the
operation of the prudence standard. Under UMIFA a charity can spend amounts above historic
dollar value that the charity determines to be prudent. The Act directs the charity to focus on the
purposes and needs of the charity rather than on the purposes and perpetual nature of the fund.
Amounts below historic dollar value cannot be spent. The Drafting Committee concluded that
this endowment spending rule created numerous problems and that restructuring the rule would
benefit charities, their donors, and the public. The problems include:
1. Historic dollar value fixes valuation at a moment in time, and that moment
is arbitrary. If a donor provides for a gift in the donor's will, the date of valuation for the
gift will likely be the donor's date of death. (UMIFA left uncertain what the appropriate
date for valuing a testamentary gift was.) The determination of historic dollar value can
vary significantly depending upon when in the market cycle the donor dies. In addition,
the fund may be below historic dollar value at the time the charity receives the gift if the
value of the asset declines between the date of the donor's death and the date the asset is
actually distributed to the charity from the estate.
2. After a fund has been in existence for a number of years, historic dollar
value may become meaningless. Assuming reasonable long term investment success, the
value of the typical fund will be well above historic dollar value, and historic dollar value
will no longer represent the purchasing power of the original gift. Without better
guidance on spending the increase in value of the fund, historic dollar value does not
provide adequate protection for the fund. If a charity views the restriction on spending
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simply as a direction to preserve historic dollar value, the charity may spend more than it
should.
3. The Act does not provide clear answers to questions a charity faces when
the value of an endowment fund drops below historic dollar value. A fund that is so
encumbered is commonly called an "underwater" fund. Conflicting advice regarding
whether an organization could spend from an underwater fund has led to difficulties for
those managing charities. If a charity concluded that it could continue to spend trust
accounting income until a fund regained its historic dollar value, the charity might invest
for income rather than on a total-return basis. Thus, the historic dollar value rule can
cause inappropriate distortions in investment policy and can ultimately lead to a decline
in a fund's real value. If, instead, a charity with an underwater fund continues to invest
for growth, the charity may be unable to spend anything from an underwater endowment
fund for several years. The inability of a charity to spend anything from an endowment is
likely to be contrary to donor intent, which is to provide current benefits to the charity.
The Drafting Committee concluded that providing clearly articulated guidance on the
prudence rule for spending from an endowment fund, with emphasis on the permanent nature of
the fund, would provide the best protection of the purchasing power of endowment funds.
Presumption of Imprudence. UPMIFA includes as an optional provision a presumption
of imprudence if a charity spends more than seven percent of an endowment fund in any one
year. The presumption is meant to protect against spending an endowment too quickly.
Although the Drafting Committee believes that the prudence standard of UPMIFA provides
appropriate and adequate protection for endowments, the Committee provided the option for
states that want to include a mechanical guideline in the statute. A major drawback to any
statutory percentage is that it is unresponsive to changes in the rate of inflation or deflation.
Modification of Restrictions on Charitable Funds. UPMIFA clarifies that the
doctrines of cy pres and deviation apply to funds held by nonprofit corporations as well as to
funds held by charitable trusts. Courts have applied trust law rules to nonprofit corporations in
the past, but the Drafting Committee believed that statutory authority for applying these
principles to nonprofit corporations would be helpful. UMIFA permitted release of restrictions
but left the application of cy pres uncertain. Under UPMIFA, as under trust law, the court will
determine whether and how to apply cy pres or deviation and the attorney general will receive
notice and have the opportunity to participate in the proceeding. The one addition to existing
law is that UPMIFA gives a charity the authority to modify a restriction on a fund that is both old
and small. For these funds, the expense of a trip to court will often be prohibitive. By permitting
a charity to make an appropriate modification, money is saved for the charitable purposes of the
charity. Even with respect to small, old funds, however, the charity must notify the attorney
general of the charity's intended action. Of course, if the attorney general has concerns, he or
she can seek the agreement of the charity to change or abandon the modification, and if that fails,
can commence a court action to enjoin it. Thus, in all types of modification the attorney general
continues to be the protector both of the donor's intent and of the public's interest in charitable
funds.
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Other Organizational Law. For matters not governed by UPMIFA, a charitable
organization will continue to be governed by rules applicable to charitable trusts, if it is
organized as a trust, or rules applicable to nonprofit corporations, if it is organized as a nonprofit
corporation.
Relation to Trust Law. Although UPMIFA applies a number of rules from trust law to
institutions organized as nonprofit corporations, in two respects UPMIFA creates rules that do
not exist under the common law applicable to trusts. The endowment spending rule of Section 4
and the provision for modifying a small, old fund in subsection (d) of Section 6 have no
counterparts in the common law or the UTC. The Drafting Committee believes that these rules
could be useful to charities organized as trusts, and the Committee recommends conforming
amendments to the UTC and the Principal and Income Act to incorporate these changes into trust
law.
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UNIFORM PRUDENT MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This [act] may be cited as the Uniform Prudent
Management of Institutional Funds Act.
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS. In this [act]:
(1) "Charitable purpose" means the relief of poverty, the advancement of education or
religion, the promotion of health, the promotion of a governmental purpose, or any other purpose
the achievement of which is beneficial to the community.
(2) "Endowment fund" means an institutional fund or part thereof that, under the terms
of a gift instrument, is not wholly expendable by the institution on a current basis. The term does
not include assets that an institution designates as an endowment fund for its own use.
(3) "Gift instrument" means a record or records, including an institutional solicitation,
under which property is granted to, transferred to, or held by an institution as an institutional
fund.
(4) "Institution" means:
(A) a person, other than an individual, organized and operated exclusively for
charitable purposes;
(B) a government or governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, to the
extent that it holds funds exclusively for a charitable purpose; or
(C) a trust that had both charitable and noncharitable interests, after all
noncharitable interests have terminated.
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(5) "Institutional fund" means a fund held by an institution exclusively for charitable
purposes. The term does not include:
(A) program-related assets;
(B) a fund held for an institution by a trustee that is not an institution; or
(C) a fund in which a beneficiary that is not an institution has an interest, other
than an interest that could arise upon violation or failure of the purposes of the fund.
(6) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership,
limited liability company, association, joint venture, public corporation, government or
governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial entity.
(7) "Program-related asset" means an asset held by an institution primarily to accomplish
a charitable purpose of the institution and not primarily for investment.
(8) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored
in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
Comment
Subsection (1). Charitable Purpose. The definition of charitable purpose follows that
of UTC § 405 and Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 28 (2003). This long-familiar standard derives
from the English Statute of Charitable Uses, enacted in 1601.
Some 17 states have created statutory definitions of charitable purpose for various
purposes. See, e.g., 10 PA. CONS. STAT. § 162.3 (2005) (defining charitable purpose within the
Solicitation of Funds for Charitable Purposes Act to include "humane," "patriotic," social
welfare and advocacy," and "civic" purposes). The definition in subsection (1) applies for
purposes of this Act and does not affect other definitions of charitable purpose.
Subsection (2). Endowment Fund. An endowment fund is an institutional fund or a part
of an institutional fund that is not wholly expendable by the institution on a current basis. A
restriction that makes a fund an endowment fund arises from the terms of a gift instrument. If an
institution has more than one endowment fund, under Section 3 the institution can manage and
invest some or all endowment funds together. Section 4 and Section 6 must be applied to
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individual funds and cannot be applied to a group of funds that may be managed collectively for
investment purposes.
Board-designated funds are institutional funds but not endowment funds. The rules on
expenditures and modification of restrictions in this Act do not apply to restrictions that an
institution places on an otherwise unrestricted fund that the institution holds for its own benefit.
The institution may be able to change these restrictions itself, subject to internal rules and to the
fiduciary duties that apply to those that manage the institution.
If an institution transfers assets to another institution, subject to the restriction that the
other institution hold the assets as an endowment, then the second institution will hold the assets
as an endowment fund.
Subsection (3). Gift Instrument. The term gift instrument refers to the records that
establish the terms of a gift and may consist of more than one document. The definition clarifies
that the only legally binding restrictions on a gift are the terms set forth in writing.
As used in this definition, "record" is an expansive concept and means a writing in any
form, including electronic. The term includes a will, deed, grant, conveyance, agreement, or
memorandum, and also includes writings that do not have a donative purpose. For example,
under some circumstances the bylaws of the institution, minutes of the board of directors, or
canceled checks could be a gift instrument or be one of several records constituting a gift
instrument. Although the term can include any of these records, a record will only become a gift
instrument if both the donor and the institution were or should have been aware of its terms when
the donor made the gift. For example, if a donor sends a contribution to an institution for its
general purposes, then the articles of incorporation may be used to clarify those purposes. If, in
contrast, the donor sends a letter explaining that the institution should use the contribution for its
"educational projects concerning teenage depression," then any funds received in response must
be used for that purpose and not for broader purposes otherwise permissible under the articles of
incorporation.
Solicitation materials may constitute a gift instrument. For example, a solicitation that
suggests in writing that any gifts received pursuant to the solicitation will be held as an
endowment may be integrated with other writings and may be considered part of the gift
instrument. Whether the terms of the solicitation become part of the gift instrument will depend
upon the circumstances, including whether a subsequent writing superseded the terms of the
solicitation. Each gift received in response to a solicitation will be subject to any restrictions
indicated in the gift instrument pertaining to that gift. For example, if an initial gift establishes
an endowment fund, and the charity then solicits additional gifts "to be held as part of the
Charity X Endowment Fund," those additional gifts will each be subject to the restriction that the
gifts be held as part of that endowment fund.
The term gift instrument includes matching funds provided by an employer or some other
person. Whether matching funds are treated as part of the endowment fund or otherwise will
depend on the terms of the matching gift.
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The term gift instrument also includes an appropriation by a legislature or other public or
governmental body for the benefit of an institution.
Subsection (4). Institution. The Act applies generally to institutions organized and
operated exclusively for charitable purposes. The term includes charitable organizations created
as nonprofit corporations, unincorporated associations, governmental subdivisions or agencies,
or any form of entity, however organized, that is organized and operated exclusively for
charitable purposes. The term includes a trust organized and operated exclusively for charitable
purposes, but only if a charity acts as trustee. This approach leaves unchanged the coverage of
UMIFA. The exclusion of "individual" from the definition of institution is not intended to
exclude a corporation sole.
Although UPMIFA does not apply to all charitable trusts, many of UPMIFA's provisions
derive from trust law. Prudent investor standards apply to trustees of charitable trusts in states
that have adopted UPIA. Trustees of charitable trusts can use the doctrines of cy pres and
deviation to modify trust provisions, and the UTC includes a number of modification provisions.
The Uniform Principal and Income Act permits allocation between principal and income to
facilitate total-return investing. Charitable trusts not included in UPMIFA, primarily those
managed by corporate trustees and individuals, will lose the benefits of UPMIFA's endowment
spending rule and the provision permitting a charity to apply cy pres, without court supervision,
for modifications to a small, old fund. Enacting jurisdictions may choose to incorporate these
rules into existing trust statutes to provide the benefits to charitable funds managed by corporate
trustees.
The definition of institution includes governmental organizations that hold funds
exclusively for the purposes listed in the definition. A governmental entity created by state law
may fall outside the definition on account of the form of organization under which the state
created it. Because state arrangements are so varied, creating a definition that encompasses all
charitable entities created by states is not feasible. States should consider applying the core
principles of UPMIFA to such governmental institutions. For example, the control over a state
university may be held by a State Board of Regents. In that situation, the state may have created
a governing structure by statute or in the state constitution so that the university is, in effect,
privately chartered. The Drafting Committee does not intend to exclude these universities from
the definition of institution, but additional state legislation may be necessary to address particular
situations.
Subsection (5). Institutional Fund. The term institutional fund includes any fund held
by an institution for charitable purposes, whether the fund is expendable currently or subject to
restrictions. The term does not include a fund held by a trustee that is not an institution.
Some institutions combine assets from multiple funds for investment purposes, and some
institutions invest funds from different institutions in a common fund. Typically each fund is
assigned units representing the share value of the individual fund. The assets are invested
collectively, permitting more efficient investment and improved diversification of the overall
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portfolio. The collective fund makes annual distributions to the individual funds based on the
units held by each fund. For purposes of Section 3 [and Section 5], the collective fund is
considered one institutional fund. Section 4 and Section 6 apply to each fund individually and
not to the collective fund.
Assets held by an institution primarily for program-related purposes rather than
exclusively for investment are not subject to UPMIFA. For example, a university may purchase
land adjacent to its campus for future development. The purchase might not meet prudent
investor standards for commercial real estate, but the purchase may be appropriate because the
university needs to build a new dormitory. The classroom buildings, administration buildings,
and dormitories held by the university all have value as property, but the university does not hold
those buildings as financial assets for investment purposes. The Act excludes from the prudent
investor norms those assets that a charity uses to conduct its charitable activities, but does not
exclude assets that have a tangential tie to the charitable purpose of the institution but are held
primarily for investment purposes.
A fund held by an institution is not an institutional fund if any beneficiary of the fund is
not an institution. For example, a charitable remainder trust held by a charity as trustee for the
benefit of the donor during the donor's lifetime, with the remainder interest held by the charity,
is not an institutional fund. However, this subsection treats as an institution a charitable
remainder trust that continues to operate for charitable purposes after the termination of the
noncharitable interests. The Act will have only a limited effect on a charitable remainder trust
that terminates after the noncharitable interest ends. During the period required to complete the
distribution of the trust's property, the prudence norm will apply to the actions of the trustee, but
the short timeframe will affect investment decision making.
Subsection (6). Person. The Act uses as the definition of person the definition approved
by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. The definition of
institution uses the term person, but to be an institution a person must be organized and operated
exclusively for charitable purposes. A person with a commercial purpose cannot be an
institution. Thus, although the definition of person includes "business trust" and "any other ...
commercial entity," the Act does not apply to an entity organized for business purposes and not
exclusively for charitable purposes. Further, the definition of person includes trusts, but only
trusts managed by charities can be institutional funds. UPMIFA does not apply to trusts
managed by corporate trustees or by individual trustees.
If a governing instrument provides that a fund will revert to the donor if, and only if, the
institution ceases to exist or the purposes of the fund fail, then the fund will be considered an
institutional fund until such contingency occurs.
Subsection (7). Program-Related Asset. Although UPMIFA does not apply to
program-related assets, if program-related assets serve, in part, as investments for an institution,
then the institution should identify categories for reporting those investments and should
establish investment criteria for the investments that are reasonably related to achieving the
institution's charitable purposes. For example, a program providing below-market loans to
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inner-city businesses may be "primarily to accomplish a charitable purpose of the institution" but
also can be considered, in part, an investment. The institution should create reasonable credit
standards and other guidelines for the program to increase the likelihood that the loans will be
repaid.
Subsection (8). Record. This definition was added to clarify that the definition of
instrument includes electronic records as defined in Section 2(8) of the Uniform Electronic
Transactions Act (1999).
SECTION 3. STANDARD OF CONDUCT IN MANAGING AND INVESTING
INSTITUTIONAL FUND.
(a) Subject to the intent of a donor expressed in a gift instrument, an institution, in
managing and investing an institutional fund, shall consider the charitable purposes of the
institution and the purposes of the institutional fund.
(b) In addition to complying with the duty of loyalty imposed by law other than this
[act], each person responsible for managing and investing an institutional fund shall manage and
invest the fund in good faith and with the care an ordinarily prudent person in a like position
would exercise under similar circumstances.
(c) In managing and investing an institutional fund, an institution:
(1) may incur only costs that are appropriate and reasonable in relation to the
assets, the purposes of the institution, and the skills available to the institution; and
(2) shall make a reasonable effort to verify facts relevant to the management and
investment of the fund.
(d) An institution may pool two or more institutional funds for purposes of management
and investment.
(e) Except as otherwise provided by a gift instrument, the following rules apply:
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(1) In managing and investing an institutional fund, the following factors, if
relevant, must be considered:
(A) general economic conditions;
(B) the possible effect of inflation or deflation;
(C) the expected tax consequences, if any, of investment decisions or
strategies;
(D) the role that each investment or course of action plays within the
overall investment portfolio of the fund;
(E) the expected total return from income and the appreciation of
investments;
(F) other resources of the institution;
(G) the needs of the institution and the fund to make distributions and to
preserve capital; and
(H) an asset's special relationship or special value, if any, to the
charitable purposes of the institution.
(2) Management and investment decisions about an individual asset must be
made not in isolation but rather in the context of the institutional fund's portfolio of investments
as a whole and as a part of an overall investment strategy having risk and return objectives
reasonably suited to the fund and to the institution.
(3) Except as otherwise provided by law other than this [act], an institution may
invest in any kind of property or type of investment consistent with this section.
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EFTA00598291
(4) An institution shall diversify the investments of an institutional fund unless
the institution reasonably determines that, because of special circumstances, the purposes of the
fund are better served without diversification.
(5) Within a reasonable time after receiving property, an institution shall make
and carry out decisions concerning the retention or disposition of the property or to rebalance a
portfolio, in order to bring the institutional fund into compliance with the purposes, terms, and
distribution requirements of the institution as necessary to meet other circumstances of the
institution and the requirements of this [act].
(6) A person that has special skills or expertise, or is selected in reliance upon the
person's representation that the person has special skills or expertise, has a duty to use those
skills or that expertise in managing and investing institutional funds.
Comment
Purpose and Scope of Revisions. This section adopts the prudence standard for
investment decision making. The section directs directors or others responsible for managing and
investing the funds of an institution to act as a prudent investor would, using a portfolio approach
in making investments and considering the risk and return objectives of the fund. The section
lists the factors that commonly bear on decisions in fiduciary investing and incorporates the duty
to diversify investments absent a conclusion that special circumstances make a decision not to
diversify reasonable. Thus, the section follows modem portfolio theory for investment decision
making. Section 3 applies to all funds held by an institution, regardless of whether the institution
obtained the funds by gift or otherwise and regardless of whether the funds are restricted.
The Drafting Committee discussed extensively the standard that should govern nonprofit
managers. UMIFA states the standard as "ordinary business care and prudence under the facts
and circumstances prevailing at the time of the action or decision." Since the decision in Stern v.
Lucy Webb Hayes National Training Schoolfor Deaconesses, 381 F. Supp. 1003 (1974), the
trend has been to hold directors of nonprofit corporations to a standard nominally similar to the
corporate standard but with the recognition that the facts and circumstances considered include
the fact that the entity is a charity and not a business corporation.
The language of the prudence standard adopted in UPMIFA is derived from the RMNCA
and from the prudent investor rule of UPIA. The standard is consistent with the business
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EFTA00598292
judgment standard under corporate law, as applied to charitable institutions. That is, a manager
operating a charitable organization under the business judgment rule would look to the same
factors as those identified by the prudent investor rule. The standard for prudent investment set
forth in Section 3 first states the duty of care as articulated in the RMNCA, but provides more
specific guidance for those managing and investing institutional funds by incorporating language
from UPIA. The criteria derived from UPIA are consistent with good practice under current law
applicable to nonprofit corporations.
Trust law norms already inform managers of nonprofit corporations. The Preamble to
UPIA explains: "Although the Uniform Prudent Investor Act by its terms applies to trusts and
not to charitable corporations, the standards of the Act can be expected to inform the investment
responsibilities of directors and officers of charitable corporations." See also, Restatement
(Third) of Trusts: Prudent Investor Rule § 379, Comment b, at 190 (1992) (stating that "absent a
contrary statute or other provision, the prudent investor rule applies to investment of funds held
for charitable corporations."). Trust precedents have routinely been found to be helpful but not
binding authority in corporate cases.
The Drafting Committee decided that by adopting language from both the RMNCA and
UPIA, UPMIFA could clarify that common standards of prudent investing apply to all charitable
institutions. Although the principal trust authorities, UPIA § (2)(a), Restatement (Third) of
Trusts §337, UTC § 804, and Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 174 (prudent administration) use
the phrase "care, skill and caution," the Drafting Committee decided to use the more familiar
corporate formulation as found in RMNCA. The standard also appears in Sections 3, 4 and 5 of
UPMIFA. The Drafting Committee does not intend any substantive change to the UPIA
standard and believes that "reasonable care, skill, and caution" are implicit in the term "care" as
used in the RMNCA. The Drafting Committee included the detailed provisions from UPIA,
because the Committee believed that the greater precision of the prudence norms of the
Restatement and UPIA, as compared with UMIFA, could helpfully inform managers of
charitable institutions. For an explanation of the Prudent Investor Act, see John H. Langbein,
The Uniform Prudent Investor Act and the Future of Trust Investing, 81 Iowa L. Rev. 641
(1996), and for a discussion of the effect UPIA has had on investment decision making, see Max
M. Schanzenbach & Robert H. Sitkoff, Did Reform of Prudent Trust Investment Laws Change
Trust Portfolio Allocation?, 50 J. L. & Econ. (forthcoming 2007).
Section 3 has incorporated the provisions of UPIA with only a few exceptions. UPIA
applies to private trusts and is entirely default law. The settlor of a private trust has complete
control over virtually all trust provisions. See UTC § 105. Because UPMIFA applies to
charitable organizations, UPMIFA makes the duty of care, the duty to minimize costs, and the
duty to investigate mandatory. The duty of loyalty is mandatory under applicable organization
law, corporate or trust. Other than these duties, the provisions of Section 3 are default rules. A
gift instrument or the governing instruments of an institution can modify these duties, but the
charitable purpose doctrine limits the extent to which an institution or a donor can restrict these
duties. In addition, subsection (a) of Section 3 reminds the decision maker that the intent of a
donor expressed in a gift instrument will control decision making. Further, the decision maker
must consider the charitable purposes of the institution and the purposes of the institutional fund
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EFTA00598293
for which decisions are being made. These factors are specific to charitable organizations; UPIA
§ 2(a) states the duty to consider similar factors in the private trust context.
UPMIFA does not include the duty of impartiality, stated in UPIA § 6, because nonprofit
corporations do not confront the multiple beneficiaries problem to which the duty is addressed.
Under UPIA, a trustee must treat the current beneficiaries and the remainder beneficiaries with
due regard to their respective interests, subject to alternative direction from the trust document.
A nonprofit corporation typically creates one charity. The institution may serve multiple
beneficiaries, but those beneficiaries do not have enforceable rights in the institution in the same
way that beneficiaries of a private trust do. Of course, if a charitable trust is created to benefit
more than one charity, rather than being created to carry out a charitable purpose, then UPIA will
apply the duty of impartiality to that trust.
In other respects, the Drafting Committee made changes to language from UPIA only
where necessary to adapt the language for charitable institutions. No material differences are
intended. Subsection (e)(1)(D) of Section 3 of UPMIFA does not include a clause that appears at
the end of UPIA § 2(c)(4) ("which may include financial assets, interest in closely held
enterprises, tangible and intangible personal property, and real property."). The Drafting
Committee deemed this clause unnecessary for charitable institutions. The language of
subsection (e)(1)(G) reflects a modification of the language of UPIA § (2)(c)(7). Other minor
modifications to the UPIA provisions make the language more appropriate for charitable
institutions.
The duties imposed by this section apply to those who govern an institution, including
directors and trustees, and to those to whom the directors or managers delegate responsibility for
investment and management of institutional funds. The standard applies to officers and
employees of an institution and to agents who invest and manage institutional funds. Volunteers
who work with an institution will be subject to the duties imposed here, but state and federal
statutes may provide reduced liability for persons who act without compensation. UPMIFA does
not affect the application of those shield statutes.
Subsection (a). Donor Intent and Charitable Purposes. Subsection (a) states the
overarching duty to comply with donor intent as expressed in the terms of the gift instrument.
The emphasis in the Act on giving effect to donor intent does not mean that the donor can or
should control the management of the institution. The other fundamental duty is the duty to
consider the charitable purposes of the institution and of the institutional fund in making
management and investment decisions. UPIA § 2(a) states a similar duty to consider the
purposes of a trust in investing and managing assets of a trust.
Subsection (b). Duty of Loyalty. Subsection (b) reminds those managing and investing
institutional funds that the duty of loyalty will apply to their actions, but Section 3 does no
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